Last week I wrote about the first destination Andrew and I visited on Museum Island, the Pergamon. I was almost as excited
about visiting the Neues Museum, a wonderfully rebuilt structure that's home to a
fabulous collection, starring the most beautiful woman in Berlin.

The wonderfully preserved bust of Queen
Nefertiti still bears the bright colours it was designed with.
For the purposes of protecting those colours, we weren’t permitted to
photograph it, so I’ve included a picture of the postcard featuring the bust.
As way of contrast, the bust of her husband Akhenaten is shown below, in
much worse condition.

The best estimate is that Nefertiti’s bust was
made around 1340 BCE. And it's stunning, not just because its colours were
preserved, but because it’s a finely rendered depiction of a mature woman. Royalty
or not, no attempt was made to hide the signs of her age (such as small folds
under her chin and bags under her eyes). Nefertiti is thought to have
assumed an equal role to her husband, as they ruled the country together.

This stunning piece of art is at the centre
of a debate over whether it belongs in Egypt or Germany. I won’t weigh in on
this argument, other than to say I’m lucky to have seen it.

The Berlin Gold Hat is one of the most
mysterious items in the Neues collection. One of four golden hats that have
been found in Europe, this one was part of a private collection that was sold
to the museum with no background information. No one knows where the Gold Hat
was found, whether other artifacts were found nearby, or who discovered it.

Equally mysterious is why a tribe of Bronze
Age people, who likely lived at a subsistence level, would have had the
aptitude or the time to create such a stunning artifact. And although the
purpose of the hat is unknown, it’s believed to have been designed for more
than its beauty. The intricate markings along the sides would have helped the
people of the time (approximately 1400 – 800 BCE) measure solar and lunar
cycles.

In other words, while the Gold Hat reminded
us of Harry Potter’s Sorting Hat, its true purpose was probably equally
magical.

Neues’ collection of papyrus documents and
ancient manuscripts looked for all the world like a series of secret codes to
be deciphered. This room is referred to as a library of the ancient world, and
its amazing collection is even more impressive than it sounds. Imagine seeing
Egyptian fairy tales from 1700 BCE, a scrap from Homer’s Iliad, and a selection from an ancient funerary book (Book of the
Dead). Although many of the pieces are written on papyrus, the collection also
includes manuscripts written on leather, textiles and parchment. And in
addition to hieroglyphs, languages ranged from Persian to Greek, from Ethiopian to
Latin.

Neues was almost completely destroyed by
bombing in the second world war, and sat in ruins for decades. An extensive
rebuilding project led to it being reopened in 2009.

The Egyptian courtyard pictured above is a
restoration of the original that was destroyed in the war. While this fresco and others like it aren’t original, they evoke a feeling of grandeur as they perch
above the collection of Egyptian sarcophagi. This sense of grandeur is unmistakable throughout the wonderfully reimagined Neues Museum.

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comments:

Thanks for the Egyptian tour :DI have been obsessed with Egypt since I was 7 years old and was lucky enough to visit before the political problems occurring there!Love how you added a Harry Potter reference :)

Beth, another amazing post about another outstanding museum in lovely Berlin - I am thrilled that you enjoyed your visits to both museums so much!Thank you for sharing all those amazing pictures!Have a fabulous weekend,Andrea

What an eclectic, interesting collection. (Growing up in NYC, I also wondered why we had so many artifacts, art pieces and treasures from other countries...) The hat truly intrigues. It's magnificent and one can only wonder at its purpose. Love the idea of the magical!